Production designer: E.Sargsyan
DOP: A.Melkumyan
Composer: A.Kartalyan
Production: “ERKAT” Production
Cast
Nora Armani (USA) and Ashot Adamyan (Armenia).
AUTOR
Scriptwriter and Director
A man and a woman. Their meeting, love, and separation against the backdrop of a city destroyed by lies and violence.
Well, the Earth is round, so moving forward means coming back…
For this reason, no one is surprised by the appearance of legionnaires on the street, the 30 pieces of silver, for which “worthy” students sign up on the list, and even the aspiring prophet, crucified in modern surgery…
Alas, each generation deserves its teachers.
And each of us has 7 days until the flood…
The film “TERM: 7 days” received widespread resonance at many film festivals around the world.
1991 – Premiere at the “House of Cinema” in Yerevan.
1992 – Broadcast in the “Elite Cinema” section of Central Television of Russia.
1992 – Screening at the “Central House of Cinematographers” in Moscow.
1992 – Sochi, Russia, National Film Festival “Kinotavr-92”.
1992 – Moscow, International Film Festival “Debut”. Diploma of cinema debuts.
1992 – USA, “The 6th American Film Institute International Film Festival” 92. A Tribute to Armenian cinema.
1992 – Washington, USA, “American Film Institute at The Kennedy Center”.
1992 – Germany, “8-Ost-West Film Fest Wiesbaden”.
1993 – USA, “16th Annual Portland International Film Festival”.
1993 – Yerevan, Festival-Competition of film debuts. Sympathy Award of the Stanislavski and Vakhtangov Armenian Fund.
1995 – Premiere on Armenian television.
PRESS about the film “TERM: 7 days”.
“The hospitable Chamber Theatre has become a kind of legend for its fans”.
Varuzhan Nazaretyan “When theatre makes a film”, “Ekran”, 1991.
The film “Term: 7 Days” was complex in its structure, plot, and expressions, therefore requiring an unusual approach. It is one of those unique works where one should speak not of the advantages but of the strength of the idea, which overshadows everything else.
…The film has an undeniable advantage. It’s educated, devoid of narrow-national tendencies…”
V.Nazaretyan, “Ekran”, 1992.